All models are supported, including the CDTV and CD32, with the
exception of the DraCo clone; BoXeR motherboards may work, but have
not been tested (and none have been furnished for testing). A3000(T)
means A3000 or A3000T tower; A4000(T) means A4000 or A4000T tower.
A2000 implies all of the A2000-derivatives (A1500, A2500, etc.). Note
that you will need a supported CPU installed.

The following Amigas have an acceptable processor built-in: A2500,
A3000, A3000T, A4000/040 (not the A4000/030, which ships with a
68EC030 processor, unless upgraded with an 040 or 060), A4000T/040 and
A4000T/060. There has been a report that the last A4000/040s produced
by Commodore were shipped with 68LC040's; these computers will not run
Linux/m68k unless you upgrade the CPU itself (swap the chip) or swap
the CPU card (or use the FPU emulator). All other Amiga models (even
the A1000) can have the correct processor (or processors, as needed)
added on; see the section called Processor for a comprehensive list of the
CPU/MMU/FPU combinations that are supported by Linux/m68k.

You can check whether you have a working PMMU or not using
"lawbreaker", a program included in the Enforcer package (available
from Aminet).

"Cards" generally refer to Zorro cards, which can be installed in
any big box Amiga (and in various tower kits for other models). Some
cards here are PCMCIA devices (like those used on laptops), which will
only work in the A600 and A1200.

Phase5 BVision PPC and Cybervision PPC (pm2fb): See
the Permedia2 framebuffer page for the files you need and any updates; the driver
only works under Linux/APUS at the moment (but should be fairly easy
to get running under Linux/m68k).

Retina Z3 (retz3)

Cirrus Logic (clgen): See the CLGen page for the files you need and any updates; the drivers should be
included in most recent kernels. Note that instructions for using the
CLGen driver are not included in the kernel sources, so you will
need the CLGen source package for the documentation, even with recent
kernels.